The two ECG channels are graphed as an x-y pair where the x coordinate is the voltage in a first ECG channel and the y coordinate is the voltage in a second ECG channel. Because neither of the coordinates is a measure of time, the system and method can collect ECG data over an extended period and collapse the data into a single display region.
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25. A method of vector superimposition and graphical display of electrocardiography data, the method comprising:
collecting a plurality of first sets of physiological data from a patient with a first sensor and a plurality of second sets of physiological data from the patient with a second sensor, wherein the plurality of first and second sets of physiological data are collected over a plurality of predetermined time periods; and
displaying the plurality of first and second sets of physiological data on a graphical user interface, wherein the graphical user interface is configured such that the first set of physiological data represents an x component and the second set of physiological data represents a y component, and further wherein a loop including the first and second sets of physiological data is graphed for each of the pre-determined time periods in a configurable matrix.
1. A method of displaying physiological data, the method comprising:
configuring a first sensor and a second sensor to receive physiological data from a patient;
collecting a plurality of first sets of physiological data from the first sensor and a plurality of second sets of physiological data from the second sensor, wherein each of the first sets of physiological data and the second set of physiological data are collected over a plurality of predetermined time periods;
graphing the plurality of first sets of physiological data and the plurality of second sets of physiological data on a graphical user interface, wherein the first set of physiological data is graphed as an x component and the second set of physiological data is graphed as a y component, and further wherein a loop including the first and second sets of physiological data is graphed for each of the pre-determined time periods in a configurable matrix; and
comparing the plurality of loops, and identifying a condition based on the comparison.
14. A system for displaying physiological data, the system comprising:
a first sensor and a second sensor configured to collect physiological data from a patient, wherein a plurality of first sets of physiological data is collected from the first sensor and a plurality of second sets of physiological data is collected from the second sensor, further wherein the plurality of first sets of physiological data and the plurality of second sets of physiological data are collected over a plurality of predetermined time periods;
a processor configured to filter the plurality of first and second sets of physiological data; and
a graphical user interface configured to graphically display the plurality of first sets of physiological data and the plurality of second sets of physiological data, wherein the first set of physiological data is graphed as an x component and the second set of physiological data is graphed as a y component, and further wherein a loop including the first and second sets of physiological data is graphed for each of the pre-determined time periods in a configurable matrix.
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The invention relates to the field of Graphical Display of Physiological Data. More particularly, the invention relates to the field of utilizing vector superimposition in electrocardiography (ECG) data displays.
Electrocardiography (ECG) signals acquired over hours or days can represent a large volume of data, difficult to present for review in a succinct way. Analysis of the data (detection and classification of individual heart beats and rhythms) allows advanced displays that can compact the presentation while emphasizing clinically significant features. Analysis, however, can take some time, delaying display of the data. Often machine analysis has errors that can exaggerate unimportant features of the data or hide important features. Some devices, like simplistic ambulatory recorders or transmitters, may have no processing capability to do an analysis, and yet could benefit from a longer duration data display. In some cases, a good data display can provide a method to input guidance to an analysis algorithm from a human operator before analysis begins.
The present invention is a method and system for the graphical display of electrocardiography (ECG) physiological data using vector superimposition. The method and system graphs two channels of ECG physiological data over a period of time to include a plurality of heart beats. The two ECG channels are graphed as an X-Y pair where the X coordinate is the voltage in a first ECG channel and the Y coordinate is the voltage in a second ECG channel. Because neither of the coordinates is a measure of time, the system and method can collect ECG data over an extended period and collapse the data into a single display region.
A method of the preferred embodiment of the present invention is graphically represented in
As described above, the two channel ECG data is graphed as a vector cardiograph loop over a period of time generally exceeding many heart beats. Preferably, signal data is high pass filtered with a corner frequency of between 0.5 and 1 Hz. Useful periods may be from six seconds (about 6 heart beats) to ten minutes (about 600 heart beats). Of course, larger or shorter periods may be used. Because each sample point is graphed as an X-Y pair where the X coordinate is the voltage in ECG channel 1 and the Y coordinate is the ECG voltage in channel 2, the graph will form a loop, naturally superimposing each heart beat on top of the previous heart beat. No analysis to detect and classify heart beats of the ECG is needed. Because neither axis is time, an extended period of time can be collapsed into a single square display region preferably about 2 mV on a side at a useful scale.
When a portable device such as a holter or telemetry monitor is used, one vector superimposition may be displayed within a 50 by 50 pixel space. Such a display could be updated every six seconds with a graph superimposing the last one minute of data. Viewing the display will give a good sense of signal quality as well as a record of recent ectopy in a small space with no processor analysis required. Of course, this is an example of how the present invention incorporates a portable device only, and should not limit such displays to particular inventory or particular sized displays.
When a workstation is used, a graphical record of 24 hours of two channel data could be presented on a single page as a 12 by 12 matrix of 10 minute loops. Again, this should not limit the size of the matrix, nor the type of workstation implemented. Periods of significant noise will be easily differentiated from periods of stable heart rhythms. Periods of arrhythmia can sometimes also be recognized, but at a contraction of 10 minutes per loop, arrhythmia is probably not reliably detected. If an interactive display is available, a clean and stable region of the ECG is easily found and can be identified to the machine as a region for algorithm learning. Almost as easily, it will be possible to identify regions of the data to mark as unreadable or as analyzable at some other more noise tolerant setting.
A display system 200 of the present invention is depicted in
Referring back to
The fact that the display system 200 is so useful without prior analysis or independent of analysis suggests it may be useful as a check of an automated analysis. Loops may be graphed of selected data. If after automated analysis loops were drawn of only those data segments thought to contain normal heart beats, many errors of beat detection and classification would be readily discerned.
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Five minutes of two channel physiological data 405, 410 is displayed in a 10 by 5 graphical user interface 400 matrix of six second vector superimposed graphical image 415 loops. An unusual extension from the sixth graphical image 420 loop in the top row motivated the user to display the one minute page of six second physiological data 405, 410. The PVC is visible in the sixth data strip 425 from top. An important observation here is that the graphical user interface 400 reviews five times as much data as the more conventional physiological data 405, 410 display. Graphical images 415 in the four rows below the top row would require additional pages of physiological data 405, 410 to review. Also, the scale of ECG voltage is twice as big (less miniaturized) in the GUI 400 at left.
A useful presentation of ECG and other physiological data can be made where automatic analysis is not available or not practical at a particular instant in time. A much longer duration of data can be presented, and at a larger scale, than normally in a display that charts against a time axis.
Having this display available the instant a holter test is acquired into a machine makes it practical for an operator to identify regions for algorithm learning and/or other regions for algorithm exclusion. This vector superimposition display may be perfect to guide an operator into choosing the best two channels to use in an automated ECG analysis. A much improved use may be made of a small LCD display on a portable acquisition system without a need for an analysis program in the portable unit.
In a conventional reviewing station, high speed review of two or more channels requires the technician to focus concentration on separate displays of superimposing waveforms, usually alternating attention from one channel to the other. A vector superimposition display combines the two channels into a single graph bringing double the information conveniently into the single focal point of the operator.
The present invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments incorporating details to facilitate the understanding of the principles of construction and operation of the invention. Such reference herein to specific embodiments and details thereof is not intended to limit the scope of the claims appended hereto. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made in the embodiment chosen for illustration without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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